Who is running 275/35/19?
Who is running 275/35/19?
Folks sticking with the stock Brembo wheels (19x9) will often turn to 275/40/19s as the widest tire with a stock-like diameter...but the diamater is .6" larger than stock which in some cases looks a bit "4x4"
275/35s are .5" shorter than stock... so they have the advantage of raising your effective "final drive ratio. There are also quite a few more tire options in this size.
Most folks say not to run the shorter tire unless you've also lowered the car..which makes some sense.
What do you guys think?
275/35s are .5" shorter than stock... so they have the advantage of raising your effective "final drive ratio. There are also quite a few more tire options in this size.
Most folks say not to run the shorter tire unless you've also lowered the car..which makes some sense.
What do you guys think?
I'm going to do exactly this. I wish I could go lower than my Steeda springs, but I have a super stiff driveway. The 275/40s will allow me to fill up that gap with tire and effectively make it look lower with less wheel well gap.
2014 SGM Roush Stage 2 --------- Moderator------




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I have 275/35R20's all around, which are basically the same height as the 275/40R19. Just yours would have more rubber and less wheel. Go with the 40's they are the perfect height. The 35's are about an inch shorter. The 40's will really fill the wheel wells nice and you can still lower if you want to. Mine has the Roush suspension which lowers about 1.5 inches off of stock. See my album for pics...
You are correct but the more stiff ride combined with the final drive increase is what did it for me since I have 3.73's. The broader range of tire choices are nice for the 35's though.
The 275/35/19s are .45" shorter versus 40s that are .63" taller than the stock 255/40s..
The 35s are closer!
They're also favoring the dimensions that would provide better acceleration in most circumstances.
The 35s are closer!
They're also favoring the dimensions that would provide better acceleration in most circumstances.
Last edited by MRGTX; Feb 2, 2015 at 10:14 AM.
The 275/40s are about the same height as the 245/45 and 235/55 that are stock too. Only the 255/40s are shorter. Everything else is taller. I'd like to take away some of my 3.73s. They're a bit much for a dd.
I'm with the other guys though on 275/40 band wagon since I also have 3.73s. With that final drive your 1-4th particularly are already short gears, and 275/35 makes them even shorter, and pretty useless for 1/4 (have to shift to 5th) or road curses (hits redline with few hundred yards left to brake zone).
True. You have a good point, and I would say that for cars with 3.31 or 3.55 final drive, if you want more acceleration this size would be the way to go. I'm with the other guys though on 275/40 band wagon since I also have 3.73s. With that final drive your 1-4th particularly are already short gears, and 275/35 makes them even shorter, and pretty useless for 1/4 (have to shift to 5th) or road curses (hits redline with few hundred yards left to brake zone).
I'm always curious about that. What did AED say about the ability of our engines to handle 7500 rpm? I'm always curious since Ford set the rev limiter at a pretty low 6800 rpm, and most tuners go to at least 7200 or 7300. Is there any longevity issues?
When I take my car to the track I do 20 or 30 minute sessions, and the engine is between 4000 and 6800 rpm for the entire duration. I wonder how well a stock Coyote motor in our TP cars can handle sustained 7000-7500 rpm excursions.

I'd love to get an intake/tune combo, but I worry about hurting my motor at sustained rpm north of 7000.
Also good point about the ride with 40 sidewall. Deffinitely better. I do notice the sidewall in my 275/40 is not as stiff as 255/40. 275/35 has got to be really stiff.
Last edited by 5.M0NSTER; Feb 2, 2015 at 10:48 AM.
Wow, nice Pat! I'm always curious about that. What did AED say about the ability of our engines to handle 7500 rpm? I'm always curious since Ford set the rev limiter at a pretty low 6800 rpm, and most tuners go to at least 7200 or 7300. Is there any longevity issues? When I take my car to the track I do 20 or 30 minute sessions, and the engine is between 4000 and 6800 rpm for the entire duration. I wonder how well a stock Coyote motor in our TP cars can handle sustained 7000-7500 rpm excursions.
I'd love to get an intake/tune combo, but I worry about hurting my motor at sustained rpm north of 7000. Also good point about the ride with 40 sidewall. Deffinitely better. I do notice the sidewall in my 275/40 is not as stiff as 255/40. 275/35 has got to be really stiff.
I'd love to get an intake/tune combo, but I worry about hurting my motor at sustained rpm north of 7000. Also good point about the ride with 40 sidewall. Deffinitely better. I do notice the sidewall in my 275/40 is not as stiff as 255/40. 275/35 has got to be really stiff.I'm picking up the parts this weekend, so I might just relist them for sale here. I got a Boss STB to go with it too.
I want to sell asap lol. I paid $650 for everything (the Boss manifold is lightly polished and ported), so since I never used it, I need to get that plus shipping. Also, the Boss letters are painted white, so it'll match your car perfectly! What do you think?
1) M-6600-50CJ High Performance billet steel oil pump
2) M-12A227-CJ13 high RPM pulse ring
Cobra Jet motor is capable of 8000+ RPM. I wonder if you're limited at 7300-7500 if you need to upgrade the oil pump as well
Last edited by 5.M0NSTER; Feb 2, 2015 at 11:49 AM.
I can't link using the app but check out s197forums.com in the 5.0 tech section there's an oil pump rebuild thread (great info) and various posts about how the higher rpm looks to be the main culprit in failures.


